Sunday Times

Acres of new land laws on the way

- By AMIL UMRAW

● As the ANC prepares a raft of legislativ­e changes to speed up land reform, the government has identified the first 139 farms to be expropriat­ed.

Party insiders who attended the two-day lekgotla of the party’s national executive committee (NEC) this week, the ANC’s highest decision-making body between conference­s, gave details of the legislativ­e plans and the expropriat­ion “guinea pig” scheme.

In addition to pushing for an amendment to section 25 of the constituti­on to allow for expropriat­ion without compensati­on, the ANC’s plans include:

● Drafting a land records bill aimed at documentin­g all landowners, both formal and informal, and ensuring security of tenure;

● Drafting a redistribu­tion bill that would provide a framework for deciding who gets priority access to land once the reform programme rolls out; and

● Amending the Interim Protection of Informal Land Rights Act to recognise those who have lived on a property for three years or more as de facto owners who cannot be dispossess­ed without their consent.

Party members at the lekgotla are said to have wanted the process of passing and implementi­ng the Expropriat­ion Bill expedited.

Once section 25 of the constituti­on has been amended, the bill can be changed to allow for expropriat­ion without compensati­on, effectivel­y doing away with the willing buyer, willing seller principle.

President Cyril Ramaphosa announced on Tuesday night that the ANC would support the amendment of section 25 even though parliament’s public consultati­on process has not been completed.

The meeting was told that the department of rural developmen­t & land reform had identified 139 farms across the country that would serve as test cases.

Details about these farms, including whether they are currently occupied or productive, could not be establishe­d.

There are also moves to prioritise rapid land releases for urban housing across the country. These plans are all expected to be carried out before the end of December.

NEC member Ronald Lamola confirmed that the party had adopted an implementa­tion plan at the lekgotla.

“We said we will take a multiprong­ed approach to land. We don’t know when the process for amendment will be finalised,” Lamola said.

“And it’s not a given that when we put the amendment to parliament, we will get a two-thirds majority vote. We will continue to expropriat­e land this way, and the parliament­ary process for a constituti­onal amendment for expropriat­ion without compensati­on will run parallel.”

He said the department of rural developmen­t had selected the 139 expropriat­ion targets after the ANC gave it a “political mandate” to test the principles currently in the constituti­on. He declined to elaborate on the status of the farms.

According to insiders privy to the discussion­s, ANC members of the Commission on Restitutio­n of Land Rights conceded that as the constituti­on stands, the state was already able to expropriat­e land without compensati­on if it so wished.

Farmers’ organisati­on Agri SA called Ramaphosa’s announceme­nt this week “premature”.

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